The last five years have been prosperous for the employees
of the state’s largest teachers union. The number of employees and officials
who received six-figure salaries from the Michigan Education Association rose from
134 to 164 during that time. This is a 22 percent increase from 2004-05 to
2009-10, according to financial documents filed by the MEA.

Overall disbursements to MEA employees and officers jumped 31
percent, from $27.2 million in 2004-05 to $34.7 million in 2009-10.

The increase in six-figure employee salaries comes while the
union’s financial situation has gotten considerably worse. In 2004-05, the MEA
listed its net assets at negative $29.9 million. For 2009-10, its net assets
have dropped to negative $132 million.

The MEA has also lost about 10,000 members over the past
five years. It had 164,007 members in 2004-05 and this fell to 153,710 in
2009-10.

“MEA firmly believes
in providing excellent compensation to all employees as a means of recruiting
and retaining the best possible workforce for MEA’s members,” wrote MEA spokesman
Doug Pratt in an e-mail.

That has been true
for several MEA members and officials, who have seen their salaries skyrocket
through promotions and raises.

For example, in 2004-05, Iris
Salters was the MEA vice president and received $169,894. Five years later, she
is the president and is paid $297,458, an increase of $127,564.

Steve Cook received $136,947 as
the MEA’s secretary treasurer in 2004-05. Five years later, he received
$232,301 as the vice president.

And Pratt has more than doubled
his compensation over the past five years. Five years ago, he was a web
administrator receiving $76,965. As director of communications in 2009, his
compensation went to $158,854.

But not all the big increases
were due to promotions.

For example Cecilia Canfield, a
secretary for the MEA, had her compensation increase from $51,658 to $83,556 in
the last five years, a 62 percent increase.

Tim Cady, a UniServe director,
saw his compensation increase from $105,615 in 2004-05 to $149,041, a 41
percent increase.

By comparison, the average
Michigan workers saw his or her annual pay increase from $40,373 in 2004 to
$43,645 in 2009, according to Bureau of Labor statistics. This is a raise of
just 8 percent that did not keep up with inflation, which was 13 percent over that
same period.

“In
some ways, this isn’t surprising in the least,” Michael Van Beek, the Mackinac
Center for Public Policy director of education policy, wrote in an e-mail. “Since
most of their funding comes from forced dues paid by teachers, regardless of
whether or not they’re members of the union, or from “services” they provide
their subsidiaries like MESSA, the MEA is largely disconnected from the economic
forces that impact both school employees and the state as a whole.”

Comments

StayEngaged

MostPopular

After months of pressure, the Saginaw Public Schools Board agreed to sell an unused building to a successful charter school in the city. The video shows the weeks of wrangling Francis Reh Academy endured.

RelatedSites

Would you like to see more information like this? Learn how you can help the Mackinac Center provide incisive, accurate and timely analysis of critical policy issues.